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In our day of
newfound and surging evil collapsing our own Two Towers many will
seek to salve their pain in the fantastic fantasy realm of Middle-Earth
this December and beyond. The life-work and written vision of British
Author of the Century J. R. R. Tolkien is now re-introduced to us
in what has become our Postmodern Book: the movies. But beyond the
story's reintroduction the films may introduce to us another more
consequential life principle wrapped around a concept enticing enough
to draw a reader through a 1,000 page epic-or a studio into spending
$300 million in bringing it to the screen.
Fellowship.
It is
not a common term to see in lights on main-street. I wonder how
many of us would have gone to see "The Matrix Fellowship" or "The
Fellowship of Austin Powers." But in reverence to the nearly-deified
author this film will do more than bear that word as title. The
movie and at least the first part of the epic book is all about
this fellowship. So, then, you and I and soon the world may be asking,
"What is fellowship?"
I don't portend
to know myself-for I am as lonely, unfriendly, and unfaithful as
many in "the world." The question is only raised here. But the question
must be asked.
For sure the
day has arrived in my country that people are considering their
lack of fellowship. People now have realized that what perhaps their
grandparents had in their church or in their neighborhood or at
their family they do not have themselves. Events since mid-September
have shell-shocked many into an introspective realization that they
lack what they would not term as fellowship-but would express as
a lack of some "thing" they can't in fact express.
For sure the
aforementioned films will arouse a keen admiration in viewers for
The Fellowship is to be dramatized for our entertainment. Millions
will connect with Frodo's fear in the face of such a weighty task,
and then fall in love with the devotion of Samwise his sidekick
and likewise the honest friendship of fellow Hobbits Merry and Pippin.
Will we wish we all had a wizard like Gandalf to advise us? A dwarf
like Gimli or an elf like Legolas to protect us? Human heroes like
Boromir or Aragorn to surprise, test and inspire us? Surely The
Fellowship could not only visually entertain us but also spark in
us the desire for a certain fellowship ourselves. Indeed these may
be the secret saviors of all Fantasy art and literature.
Far more unsure
is who will answer the questions as to who our "fellowship" will
be in real life. Who will tell me who is to love, protect, advise,
surprise, test, and inspire me? Who will be my fellowship? Who will
be yours? When I read the last page or when they scroll the credits
who will be my fellowship of more than The Ring-the fellowship of
my life?
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